Purification and Properties of Wild-type and Exonuclease-deficient DNA Polymerase II from Escherichia coli(*)

  1. Myron F. Goodman(1)
  1. From the (1) Department of Biological Science, Hedco Molecular Biology Laboratories, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1340, the
  2. (2)Department of Biological Chemistry and the Molecular Biology Institute, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90024, and the
  3. (3)Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709

Abstract

Wild-type DNA polymerase II (pol II) and an exonuclease-deficient pol II mutant (D155A/E157A) have been overexpressed and purified in high yield from Escherichia coli. Wild-type pol II exhibits a high proofreading 3′-exonuclease to polymerase ratio, similar in magnitude to that observed for bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase. While copying a 250-nucleotide region of the lacZα gene, the fidelity of wild-type pol II is high, with error rates for single-base substitution and frameshift errors being ≤10Graphic. In contrast, the pol II exonuclease-deficient mutant generated a variety of base substitution and single base frameshift errors, as well as deletions between both perfect and imperfect directly repeated sequences separated by a few to hundreds of nucleotides. Error rates for the pol II exonuclease-deficient mutant were from ≥13- to ≥240-fold higher than for wild-type pol II, depending on the type of error considered. These data suggest that from 90 to >99% of base substitutions, frameshifts, and large deletions are efficiently proofread by the enzyme. The results of these experiments together with recent in vivo studies suggest an important role for pol II in the fidelity of DNA synthesis in cells.

Footnotes

  • * This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants GM21422, GM42554, and GM29558. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

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